The North-Bound Rider

Poetry collection by Ian Mudie
The North-Bound Rider
AuthorIan Mudie
LanguageEnglish
Genrepoetry
PublisherRigby, Adelaide
Publication date
1963
Publication placeAustralia
Media typePrint
Pages48pp
Preceded byThe Blue Crane 
Followed byLook, the Kingfisher 

The North-Bound Rider (1963) is the seventh poetry collection by Australian author and poet Ian Mudie. It won the Grace Leven Prize for Poetry in 1963.[1]

The collection consists of 34 poems, with the bulk of them having been previously published in various Australian poetry and literary journals and anthologies.[1]

Contents

  • "The North-Bound Rider"
  • "The Silent Birds"
  • "Summer in the City"
  • "Afternoon on the Beach"
  • "Girl and Swan"
  • "On Reaching the Summit of Horrocks Pass"
  • "Relatively Speaking"
  • "Six Sixes Are Thirty-Five"
  • "Christies Beach"
  • "Highway Eight"
  • "Dry Spring Paddock"
  • "Love is the Black Swan"
  • "Ned Kelly Speaks"
  • "To Rex Ingamells: December 30, 1955"
  • "Wild Flesh his Food"
  • "Visitors"
  • "Rain: A.D. 2378"
  • "Every Man His Own Villain"
  • "To an Old Man, Met Long Ago"
  • "The Crab or the Tree"
  • "Trophy"
  • "Seal Rock"
  • "Anyway"
  • "Sunday in the Garden"
  • "How Long is Permanent"
  • "I Wouldn't be Lord Mayor"
  • "In Neon Pastures"
  • "Saturday, June 21"
  • "Interstate Driver"
  • "Flying Fish"
  • "The Anthropologist's Address to His Shovel"
  • "Orraparinna"
  • "The Cave"
  • "Wilderness Theme"

Critical reception

In his review of the poetry collection in Salient : Victoria University Students' Paper Murray Rowlands wrote that in the "best of his poems there is evidence of a maturity that makes even the heaviest cliche get off the ground. This may be linked up with his advocacy of verse speaking and his belief that all poetry should be spoken. His volume runs the gamut of all the Australian images, the vast outback, the beach and memory, the unrealistic city, Ned Kelly, the old farmer, the mildness of Australian winters, the snake, and destructive semi-tropical rain."[2]

Awards

See also

  • 1963 in poetry
  • 1963 in Australian literature

References

  1. ^ a b Austlit - The North-Bound Rider by Ian Mudie
  2. ^ "Aussie Poet Mudie Shows Maturity" by M Murray Rowlands, Salient, Vol 26. No 8, July 1963
  • v
  • t
  • e
1947–1949
  • Pacific Sea by Nan McDonald (1947)
  • A Drum for Ben Boyd by Francis Webb (1948)
  • Woman to Man by Judith Wright (1949)
1950–1959
  • No award (1950)
  • The Great South Land : An Epic Poem by Rex Ingamells (1951)
  • Between Two Tides by R. D. Fitzgerald (1952)
  • Tumult of the Swans by Roland Robinson (1953)
  • Thirty Poems by John Thompson (1954)
  • The Wandering Islands by A. D. Hope (1955)
  • No award (1956)
  • Elegiac and Other Poems by Leonard Mann (1957)
  • Antipodes in Shoes by Geoffrey Dutton (1958)
  • The Wind at Your Door by R. D. Fitzgerald (1959)
1960–1969
1970–1979
1980–1989
1990–1999
  • No award (1990)
  • Dog Fox Field by Les Murray (1991)
  • Empire of Grass by Gary Catalano (1992)
  • Peniel by Kevin Hart (1992)
  • The End of the Season by Philip Hodgins (1993)
  • No award (1994)
  • New and Selected Poems by Kevin Hart (1995)
  • Flying the Coop : New and Selected Poems 1972-1994 by Rhyll McMaster (1995)
  • Path of Ghosts: poems 1986-93 by Jemal Sharah (1995)
  • No award (1996)
  • The Undertow: New and Selected Poems by John Kinsella (1997)
  • No award (1998)
  • No award (1999)
2000–2009
  • No award (2000)
  • Darker and Lighter by Geoff Page (2001)
  • Versary by Kate Lilley (2002)
  • Lost in the Foreground by Stephen Edgar (2003)
  • Totem by Luke Davies (2004)
  • Next to Nothing by Noel Rowe (2005)
  • The Past Completes Me: Selected Poems 1973-2003 by Alan Gould (2006)
  • The Goldfinches of Baghdad by Robert Adamson (2007)
  • The Australian Popular Songbook by Alan Wearne (2008)
  • No award (2009)
2010–present
  • Phantom Limb by David Musgrave (2010)
  • No award (2011)
  • Another Fine Morning in Paradise by Michael Sharkey (2012)